EU strikes initial deal to scrap roaming fees in 2017

Foo Yun Chee, Julia Fioretti

3 Min Read

BRUSSELS (Reuters) - The European Union reached a preliminary deal on Tuesday to abolish mobile roaming charges across the 28-country bloc by June 2017 and to require telecom operators to treat all Internet traffic equally.

A paper with the word "Roaming", crossed out, is seen on the desk of a Member of the European Parliament during a debate in Strasbourg, March 11, 2015. REUTERS/Vincent Kessler

The draft agreement for the end of roaming surcharges on June 15, 2017, marks an important step in the EU’s plan to overhaul the continent’s digital market to boost growth and catch up with the United States and Asia.

However, consumer groups gave the news a lukewarm reception, saying network operators would be able to limit the amount of surcharge-free roaming due to a “fair use” clause designed to stop users permanently roaming with a cheaper foreign contract.

The deal, struck between EU lawmakers and Latvia, which holds the rotating EU presidency, will require approval from the European Parliament and EU member states, some of whom have not wanted roaming charges abolished until December 2018.

In an interim move, roaming charges will drop in April 2016, with maximum surcharges of 0.05 euros per minute of a call or megabyte of data and 0.02 euros per text sent.

That will make the maximum roaming charge about 75 percent cheaper than under current tariff caps, the Commission said.

The Commission has been setting caps on roaming prices since 2007 and says retail prices for cross-border calls, texts and data have fallen by more than 80 percent and for data by up to 91 percent.

EU consumer group BEUC said ending roaming surcharges was reliant on increased mobile competition, which would require an overhaul of wholesale prices paid between operators. This would be a tough task.

Built-in exceptions, such as for “fair use”, were also a problem as was the risk that network operators might be inclined to raise domestic prices or trim telecom packages to compensate.

On the issue of net neutrality, the EU plans to order telecoms operators to treat all Internet traffic equally and that blocking would only be allowed for clear reasons, such as counter cyber attacks or child pornography.

Companies such as Deutsche Telekom, Orange and Telecom Italia had lobbied to have more leeway to tap into a potentially lucrative source of revenue, but Internet activists say this could create a two-speed Internet that benefits companies with deep pockets.

The rules could benefit start-ups that showcase their business or sell on the Internet and need to be able to compete on an equal footing with larger players. The latter would not be able to pay for privileged access to end-users.

“The access to a start-up’s website will not be unfairly slowed down to make way for bigger companies. No service will be stuck because it does not pay an additional fee to Internet service providers. There won’t be gatekeepers to decide what you can and cannot access,” the Commission said.

The common EU-wide Internet rules are to enter force in all 28 members on April 30, 2016.

Additional reporting by Philip Blenkinsop; editing by Jason Neely and David Evans